The Pacific coasts of Costa Rica, Panama and Nicaragua are no longer the focus of tsunami warnings, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center announced just after 1 p.m ET.

As we've been reporting, there was a strong — 7.6 magnitude — earthquake in Costa Rica this morning. At first, there were concerns about possible tsunamis from Mexico south to Chile. As the day continued, however, authorities gradually reduced their warnings.

There still isn't much word about the extent of any damage in Costa Rica or whether there were any deaths or injuries. Reuters says the temblor "rocked Costa Rica ... rattling buildings, cutting power in areas of the capital and triggering a tsunami warning, though there were no immediate reports of casualties."

Update at 2:45 p.m. ET. Two Deaths Reported:

Two deaths have been connected to the earthquake, Reuters reports. Red Cross spokesman Freddy Roman tells the wire service that one person suffered a fatal heart attack. It adds that local news outlets say another person was crushed under debris.

Update at 1:45 p.m. ET. Some Reports Of Damage:

"There are reports of some damage in Nicoya, on Costa Rica's northern Pacific coast," NPR's Larry Abramson emails from Costa Rica, where he has been vacationing. He has not heard of any "serious damage or injuries."

Meanwhile, the BBC says that "Douglas Salgado of the National Commission of Risk Prevention and Emergency Attention told the Associated Press news agency that there were no initial reports of damage or deaths in the earthquake zone. He said officials were having problems reaching people in the area nearest the epicenter."

Update at 11:50 a.m. ET. Shaking Was "Quite Significant":

"The earthquake this morning was quite significant," says NPR's Larry Abramson, who is in Costa Rica on vacation. "It's one of those experiences where you feel like the wind is blowing very hard and then you realize that basically the entire house is shaking."

Larry adds that it was "pretty intense" for about 30 seconds. Where he is, in the mountains near San Jose, there does not seem to be extensive damage.

Update at 11:45 a.m. ET. Tsunami Warning Area Reduced:

The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center now says it has canceled tsunami warnings for El Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, Guatemala and Peru. That leaves three countries still in the "warning" zone: Costa Rica, Panama and Nicaragua.

Update at 11:25 a.m. ET: The earthquake struck at 8:24 a.m. local time (10:25 a.m. ET).

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